Terri Moon Cronk at DoD News offers the below piece:
WASHINGTON, Dec. 29, 2015 — A high-value Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant leader killed by U.S.-led coalition airstrikes Dec. 24 was just one of 10 ISIL leaders targeted and killed so far this month, Combined Joint Task Force Operation Inherent Resolve spokesman Army Col. Steve Warren (shown in the above U.S. Army photo) confirmed today.
Speaking to reporters at the Pentagon via a
live satellite feed from Baghdad, Warren said Syria-based Charaffe al Mouadan
was “planning additional attacks against the West,” and was directly linked to
Abdelhamid Abaaoud, leader of the cell responsible for the terrorist attacks in
Paris last month.
The ISIL leaders were killed in coalition
airstrikes that took place from Dec. 7-27, he said, noting that several were
external attack planners linked to the Paris attacks.
‘Striking at the Head of the
Snake’
“In addition to our tactical operations, we
are also striking at the head of this snake by hunting down and killing ISIL
leaders,” Warren said.
Warren also provided descriptions of the
other nine deceased ISIL leaders:
-- Rawand Dilsher Taher, an external
operations facilitator; and Khalil Ahmad Ali al-Wais, also known as Abu Wadhah
of Kirkuk province, Afghanistan. Taher, killed Dec. 7 near Raqqah,
Syria, was a trusted ISIL member who assisted with command and
control and handling and transferring money and equipment. Abu Wadhad, the ISIL
emir of Kirkuk province had a long history of targeting U.S. and Iraqi forces,
and he was killed Dec. 7 near Huwayjah, Iraq.
-- Abu Anas, an ISIL bomb cell facilitator,
was killed Dec. 8 near Kirkuk, Iraq. His death, Warren said, “will disrupt
ISIL's ability to conduct [improvised explosive device] attacks near
Kirkuk.”
-- Yunis Khalash, aka Abu Jawdat, who was
ISIL’s deputy financial emir in Mosul, was killed Dec 9. His death will burden
senior ISIL cadre to find a technically skilled and trustworthy replacement,
Warren said. Mithaq Najim, ISIL’s deputy emir in Kirkuk province was also killed
Dec. 9 near Huwayjah, Iraq. “Najim's removal disrupts ISIL’s ability to train,
command and maintain fighters in Kirkuk province,” Warren said.
-- Syria-based Bangladeshi Siful Haque
Sujan was killed Dec. 10 near Raqqah, Syria. Sujan was an external operations
planner and a United Kingdom-educated computer systems engineer, Warren said,
adding Sujan supported ISIL hacking efforts, anti-surveillance technology and
weapons development. “Now that he's dead, ISIL has lost a key link between
networks,” he said.
-- Akram Muhammad Sa'ad Faris, also known
as Akram Aabu, an ISIL commander and executioner, was killed Dec. 12 near his
base of operations in Tal Afar, Iraq.
-- Abdel Kader Hakim, another ISIL external
operations facilitator, was killed Dec. 26 in Mosul, Iraq. Hakim was a veteran
fighter and forgery specialist who had links to the Paris attack network, who
also was part of ISIL’s external operations group who enabled attacks against
Western targets. “His death removes an important facilitator with many
connections in Europe,” Warren said.
--Tashin al-Hayali, an external operations
facilitator, was killed Dec. 27 near Mosul, Warren said.
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